WARNING: This post deals with a severe form of post-natal depression. Anyone who feels it may be distressing for them may wish to avoid reading the details.
For Amy Black breaking point came on September 1 2013.
For anyone who knew her it was obvious Amy was struggling with being a new Mum.
But no one could predict it would come to this.
No one could see just how dire the situation was.
Amy Black’s story is one of unimaginable pain and suffering. How anyone could get to this point is a tragedy in itself.
The new Mum was 39 when she gave birth to her daughter Zoe. She was an American living in the UK, and married to a British man.
There was speculation she was lonely.
Speculation she was not coping.
Speculation she was close to suicide.
But on September 1 2013 she went beyond what those around her ever thought possible, she drowned her seven-month old daughter Zoe.
Baby Zoe had been screaming with an ear infection- she had not slept.
We all know it. We’ve all been there with young babies. It is a right-to-the-bone-tiredness, a brain numbness. A minute-to-minute struggle to get through the night,
Top Comments
Where was the father? Why didnt't he get help?
Completely tragic and it sounds like classic post-partum psychosis. I can't help but think that regular visits from maternal child and health nurses (or their UK equivalent) might have spotted this ("hearing voices from the TV urging her to do things" - one of the biggest hallmarks of psychosis and schizophrenia.) But it's also not my place to judge. My experience with MHCN in Australia has been pretty good, so I'd like to think it wouldn't happen here.